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'Asteroid busters' widen search to protect Earth

Moncton101 wrote on 8/18/2006 8:51:16 PM :

 

 

 


'Asteroid busters' widen search to protect Earth

 

PRAGUE ??? They are out there, hidden among a haze of stars ??? killer asteroids. Now the world's astronomers are keeping a wary eye to the skies for giant objects on a collison course with Earth.

Experts say there are about 1,100 comets and asteroids in the inner solar system that are at least 800 metres across, and that any one of them could unleash a global cataclysm capable of killing millions in a single blinding flash.

On Thursday, the International Astronomical Union said it has set up a special task force to sharpen its focus on threats from such ???near-Earth objects.???

???The goal is to discover these killer asteroids before they discover us,??? said Nick Kaiser of the University of Hawaii's Institute for Astronomy, which hopes to train four powerful digital cameras on the heavens to watch for would-be intruders.


 There is currently no way to stop one, but scientists believe that some day a defence could be devised, such as using spacecraft to divert a killer comet.

Congress has asked NASA for a plan to comb the cosmos for even smaller, more distant objects, including asteroids only 1?? football fields across. The space agency is to catalogue their position, speed and course by 2020. Already, there are 103 objects on an ???impact risk??? watch list.

Scientists warn there are as many as 100,000 of these ???smaller??? heavenly bodies with the potential to take out entire cities or set off a tsunami like the killer wave that swept through the Indian Ocean in December, 2004.

Earth's craters bear silent witness to what can happen even when a smallish asteroid slams home.

In 1908, one struck remote central Siberia, unleashing as much energy as a 15-megaton nuclear bomb. Fortunately, it wiped out 60 million trees, not people. Had it hit a populated area, the loss of life would have been staggering.

There is some recent good news too: Earth's most pressing threat ??? the asteroid 99942 Apophis ??? appears to have eased. Scientists initially gave it a 1-in-5,500 chance of hitting the planet in 2036, with enough power to wipe out the New York City metro area. Experts said Thursday, however, that the latest observations suggest those odds have dwindled to 1-in-30,000.

They will not be sure until it makes an earlier pass in 2029, when it is expected to come within 30,000 kilometres of Earth. If that sounds comfortably distant, consider this: That is closer than many commercial satellites and a good deal nearer than the moon.

Although close encounters are unnerving, they give astronomers a unique opportunity to get a better glimpse of asteroids and comets ??? the leftover building materials of the universe ??? and gain a better understanding of the origins of the solar system.

Scientists say expanding their database of the objects crowding Earth's neighbourhood could help produce a permanent warning system like those that now monitor the Pacific for tsunamis or keep tabs on volcanoes and earthquake zones.

Give the world a decade or so of lead time to deal with a specific threat, they say, and it stands a chance of getting out of harm's way ??? perhaps by sending up a spacecraft to nudge an asteroid off course.

???Right now, unfortunately, there are no 'asteroid busters' or hot lines. Who ya gonna call???? said Andrea Milani Comparetti, a professor of mathematics at Italy's University of Pisa.

To be on the safe side, astronomers trying to determine the odds of one's hitting Earth work with computer models that surround it with thousands of ???virtual asteroids.??? Experts then map out the likely orbits for each one and factor those in to come up with the probability of an impact.

Widening the search for threatening objects creates a problem: Discoveries could become commonplace, either creating unnecessary panic and confusion or lulling the public into a false sense of complacency.

???We're now going to be finding such objects once a week instead of once a year,??? said David Morrison, a NASA scientist who will chair the new task force.

???Only in Hollywood do asteroids arbitrarily change orbits,??? he said. ???There is great potential for misunderstanding. Dealing with probability and risk is a problem for all of us, whether we're dealing with asteroid impacts or terrorist attacks.???

Bottom line: Mankind may not be able to dodge every cosmic bullet.

???It's through collisions that planets are born,??? said Giovanni Valsecchi of Italy's National Institute of Astrophysics. ???And it's through collisions that planets die.???

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http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/neo/

 

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Near Earth Object Program
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Table Of Contents

Introduction & Overview
NEO Groups
Near-Earth Objects And Life On Earth
Target Earth
Near-Earth Objects As Future Resources

INTRODUCTION & OVERVIEW
Near-Earth Objects (NEOs) are comets and asteroids that have been nudged by the gravitational attraction of nearby planets into orbits that allow them to enter the Earth's neighborhood. Composed mostly of water ice with embedded dust particles, comets originally formed in the cold outer planetary system while most of the rocky asteroids formed in the warmer inner solar system between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. The scientific interest in comets and asteroids is due largely to their status as the relatively unchanged remnant debris from the solar system formation process some 4.6 billion years ago. The giant outer planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune) formed from an agglomeration of billions of comets and the left over bits and pieces from this formation process are the comets we see today. Likewise, today's asteroids are the bits and pieces left over from the initial agglomeration of the inner planets that include Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars.

As the primitive, leftover building blocks of the solar system formation process, comets and asteroids offer clues to the chemical mixture from which the planets formed some 4.6 billion years ago. If we wish to know the composition of the primordial mixture from which the planets formed, then we must determine the chemical constituents of the leftover debris from this formation process - the comets and asteroids.

Eyeball looking around Keeping An Eye On Space Rocks

A multimedia presentation (Flash 6 required).

http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/templates/flash/neo/neo.htm